Re-Awakened :I Ascend as an SSS-Ranked Dragon Summoner - Chapter 500
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- Chapter 500 - Chapter 500: Storm breakout
Chapter 500: Storm breakout
The events of the previous day were ones the team had to put behind them, although that was difficult considering the scale of threat that Arthur now possessed. Word had already been sent to Lucy about what they discovered, and she’d claimed she’d get in touch with the other family heads to coordinate a way forward.
For now, Eclipse Faction had to focus on what they could control—preparing themselves for the war that was coming whether they were ready or not.
The main training hall had been cleared of equipment, leaving an open space large enough to accommodate all forty faction members. Morning light filtered through high windows, casting long shadows across the floor where recruits sat in meditation positions that probably looked more uncomfortable than they felt.
Noah stood at the front with Lila beside him, both of them watching the assembled members with varying degrees of patience. Diana, Kelvin, and Seraleth sat among the recruits despite being leadership, all of them needing to learn what Noah and Lila were about to teach.
“Chi is a naturally existing energy present in nature,” Noah began, his voice carrying clearly through the hall. “Every human has it flowing through them right now. You don’t need to awaken it or unlock it—it’s already there. What you need to learn is how to sense it, direct it, and use it.”
Lila stepped forward. “We’re starting with white chi, also called light chi or internal chi. It’s the foundation. Dark chi is more aggressive, harder to control, and we’ll get to that later. But if you try to learn dark chi without understanding white chi first, you’ll hurt yourself.”
“How badly?” one of the recruits asked.
“Spasms if you’re lucky,” Noah replied. “Bleeding from your eyes and nose if you’re not. Chi can be directed, but when you try to force it, your body rejects the manipulation. It’s like trying to dam a river by standing in front of it—the water’s going to find a way through, and you’re going to get hurt in the process.”
He moved to sit cross-legged on the floor, gesturing for everyone to mirror his position. “Master Anng at the academy used to say: direct it like a river, don’t try to control it. Let it flow naturally and guide its path.”
The recruits adjusted their positions, some more successfully than others. Valencia already sat with proper posture, her back straight and her breathing even. Marcus looked like he was preparing for combat rather than meditation. Chen kept fidgeting, clearly uncomfortable with stillness.
“Close your eyes,” Lila instructed. “Focus on your breathing first. In through your nose, hold for three seconds, out through your mouth. Don’t think about chi yet. Just breathe.”
The hall went quiet except for the sound of forty people trying to synchronize their breathing. Some managed it naturally. Others were clearly counting in their heads, their breath patterns stilted and mechanical.
Noah walked between the rows, observing without commenting. Diana sat with her eyes closed, her expression unusually peaceful. Kelvin’s cybernetic arms rested on his knees, and Noah wondered briefly if the prosthetics would interfere with chi flow. Seraleth’s breathing was already perfectly measured, her elven physiology was probably giving her advantages in meditation that humans had to work for.
“Now,” Noah said after several minutes, “while you’re breathing, I want you to focus inward. Not on your thoughts—let those pass like clouds. Focus on the sensation of your body. Your heartbeat. The blood moving through your veins. The warmth in your chest.”
“Chi resides in your core,” Lila added. “For most people, that’s centered roughly behind your navel, a few inches inside your body. It’s not a physical organ—you won’t find it with a scanner or a medical examination. But you’ll feel it once you know what you’re looking for.”
“What does it feel like?” someone asked without opening their eyes.
“Different for everyone,” Noah replied. “Some people describe it as warmth. Others say it’s like a gentle current. I always felt it as a pressure, like something contained but wanting to expand. Don’t force the sensation. Just observe what’s there.”
The hall went silent again, deeper this time. Some recruits were clearly struggling, their faces scrunched with concentration. Others had fallen into the meditation more naturally, their expressions relaxed.
Valencia gasped suddenly, her eyes snapping open. “I felt something. It was warm, right where you said it would be.”
“Good,” Lila said with approval. “Now close your eyes again and find it again. Once you’ve located it, just observe. Don’t try to move it yet.”
They continued for another thirty minutes. More recruits began reporting sensations—warmth, pressure, a tingling feeling that wasn’t quite physical. A few admitted they felt nothing, frustration evident in their voices.
“Don’t worry if you can’t sense it yet,” Noah said. “Some people find their chi on the first try. Others take weeks of daily practice. There’s no right timeline. What matters is consistency.”
“For those of you who have found it,” Lila continued, “we’re going to try something simple. Keep your eyes closed and locate your chi again. Once you have it, I want you to imagine it moving. Not forcing it, not pushing it, just suggesting a direction. Try to guide it from your core up toward your chest.”
Noah demonstrated, letting white chi flow through his meridians until it reached his chest. A soft glow became visible beneath his shirt, faint but unmistakable. “It should feel natural, like water following a path you’ve created. If it hurts or feels wrong, stop immediately.”
Several recruits tried, their faces showing intense concentration. Marcus grunted with effort, then immediately clutched his side as pain lanced through his ribs.
“I said don’t force it,” Noah reminded him, moving to check on him. “You just tried to push your chi like you’d push a physical object. That’s not how it works. Rest for now and try again later.”
Diana was the next to show visible results. White chi flowed from her core to her hands, manifesting as a gentle glow around her palms. She opened her eyes, staring at her hands with fascination. “This is incredible. I can feel it moving, responding to my intention.”
“That’s white chi augmentation,” Lila explained. “The most basic application. You’re channeling internal energy to enhance your body. It can supplement oxygen to your muscles, power your cells more efficiently, even slow or speed up your heart rate if you know what you’re doing.”
Kelvin raised his hand, his expression thoughtful. “Can chi flow through prosthetics? Because I’m definitely feeling something in my core, but I don’t know if it can reach my arms.”
“Try it,” Noah suggested. “Chi follows intention more than physical pathways. Your arms are connected to your nervous system, right? Chi should be able to flow through that connection.”
Kelvin focused, his face screwing up with concentration. After a moment, his cybernetic arms began to glow with white energy, the light flowing through the mechanical components like they were organic tissue. “Holy shit, it works.”
“Because chi is fundamental energy,” Lila said. “It doesn’t care if your body parts are biological or mechanical. It responds to your will and your life force.”
Seraleth had been silent through most of the instruction, her meditation deeper and more focused than the others. Now she opened her eyes, and white chi blazed around her entire body—not just her hands or core, but flowing through every limb, every muscle, creating an aura that made her seem to glow from within.
“I understand,” she said simply. “This is similar to techniques we practiced in the Lilivil military, though we called it something different. Life force channeling.”
“Show us what you can do with it,” Noah suggested.
Seraleth stood, the white chi intensifying around her right fist until it looked like her hand was wrapped in glowing energy. She moved to where training equipment was stored along the wall, selecting a piece of reinforced plating that had been salvaged from a Category Three beast. The material was known for its durability—standard weapons struggled to penetrate it without specialized ammunition.
She set the plating on the ground, took a breath to center herself, then struck.
Her fist went through the plating like it was paper. The material didn’t crack or shatter—it simply ceased to offer resistance, her chi-enhanced punch overwhelming its structural integrity completely. When she pulled her hand back, a perfect fist-sized hole remained, the edges glowing faintly from residual energy.
The training hall erupted in shocked murmurs.
“That’s what chi augmentation can do when you’ve mastered it,” Noah said, letting the demonstration speak for itself. “Seraleth’s elven physiology gives her a head start, but every single one of you can reach that level with practice. It just takes time.”
“How much time?” Chen asked.
“Depends on the person,” Lila replied. “Some people have natural aptitude. Others have to work harder. But everyone can learn this. It’s not limited by your awakened abilities or your generation ranking. Chi is universal.”
They continued training for another hour, cycling through meditation, chi sensing, and basic manipulation exercises. By the end of the session, roughly a third of the recruits had successfully located their chi. Half of those could move it slightly from their core. Only Diana, Kelvin, and Seraleth had achieved visible manifestation.
“This is just day one,” Noah reminded them as they broke for lunch. “We’ll practice every morning. Some of you will progress faster than others, and that’s fine. What matters is that you keep practicing, keep trying, keep learning. Because when the real fight comes, this could be the difference between surviving and not.”
The recruits dispersed, talking excitedly among themselves about what they’d experienced. Noah noticed Lila lingering near the training equipment, she was lost in thought.
“You did good,” he said, approaching her. “Teaching suits you.”
“I’ve never taught anything before,” she admitted. “My parents taught me chi when I was young, but I never thought I’d be passing it on.”
“Your parents,” Noah said carefully. “We need to talk about what happened in the north.”
Lila’s expression shifted, became guarded. “I know what you’re going to say.”
“Do you?” Noah kept his voice neutral. “Because I’m not sure you understand how close we came to losing everything up there. Not just the mission—everything. If Arthur had decided we were worth pursuing, if those Harbingers had followed us, if the Purge had gotten vehicles airborne fast enough… we’d all be dead or captured.”
“I had an opening—”
“You had nothing,” Noah interrupted. “You saw the man who founded the organization your parents serve, and you lost control. I get it. I understand the anger, the need for revenge, the feeling that you have to do something right now. But you can’t work with this team if you’re going to go rogue every time emotions run high.”
Lila’s jaw tightened. “So what, you’re kicking me out?”
“No.” Noah met her eyes directly. “I’m telling you that if you want to be part of this faction, if you want to work with us, you need to prove you can follow tactical decisions even when they go against what you want personally. One warning, Lila. That’s what you get. Next time, there won’t be second chances.”
She looked away, her hands clenching into fists. “I’m not good at following orders. Never have been.”
“Then learn,” Noah said simply. “Because the alternative is working alone, and you already told me how that’s been going for you.”
They stood in silence for a moment. Then Lila stepped closer, her expression shifting into something softer, more vulnerable. “Noah, I—”
“Don’t,” he said gently but firmly. “Whatever you’re about to say, whatever you’re thinking… don’t. Not right now.”
“Why not?”
“Because I need to know you take this seriously first.” Noah gestured around the training hall. “The faction. The team. The mission. All of it. Prove to me that you’re here for the right reasons, that you can work with others, that you won’t compromise everything the next time your personal vendetta conflicts with tactical sense.”
“And then?” Lila asked quietly.
“Then we’ll see.” Noah’s expression softened slightly. “But first things first. Be the person I know you can be. Not the person your anger is turning you into.”
Lila held his gaze for another moment, then nodded slowly. “Okay. I’ll prove it.”
“Good.” Noah turned to leave, then paused. “And Lila? Thank you. For helping with the training. For sharing what your parents taught you. That took courage.”
She smiled slightly, some of that dangerous edge returning to her expression. “Don’t get soft on me, Eclipse. I’m still the only person who’d have kicked your ass during the academy tournament.”
“You wish,” Noah replied, grinning. “You were lucky we weren’t drawn and you know it.”
He left her there, heading toward the administrative wing where Sophie and Sam were coordinating faction operations. The conversation with Lila had gone better than expected—she’d accepted the warning without major pushback, and he genuinely believed she’d try to do better.
Whether she succeeded was another question entirely.
Sam’s office was organized chaos as always, multiple displays showing contract requests, resource allocations, and personnel schedules. Sophie stood beside him, reviewing something on a tablet while Sam made notes on his own device.
“How’d training go?” Sophie asked when Noah entered.
“Better than expected. About a third of the recruits found their chi on the first try. Seraleth’s already using it for combat augmentation.”
“Space elves,” Sam muttered. “Of course they pick it up instantly.”
“Any updates from Lucy?” Noah asked.
“Not yet,” Sophie replied. “She said coordinating with the other family heads would take time. Arthur’s connection to the Purge complicates everything—they need to figure out how to respond without triggering open war.”
“Meanwhile we train and prepare,” Noah said.
“Meanwhile we train and prepare,” Sophie agreed.
Sam suddenly sat up straighter, his attention focused on his main display. “Huh. That’s weird.”
“What?” Noah moved to look over his shoulder.
“New contract request just came in. Settlement Gamma-7 in the eastern sector’s outer territories.” Sam pulled up the details, his expression growing more confused as he read. “They’re reporting… a dragon attack?”
Noah went very still. “What?”
“Multiple witnesses,” Sam continued, reading from the report. “Black scales. Blue energy patterns. Flying and breathing ice. Category Five threat assessment based on the damage it’s caused.” He looked up at Noah. “They’re describing a dragon. From what I’ve heard from kelvin that’s YOUR dragon, right? Storm.”
Sophie frowned. “That’s not possible. Storm’s in your domain, right?”
“Yeah.” Noah’s mind raced through possibilities. “He hasn’t manifested since we got back to Earth. And even if he broke out again, I’d feel it immediately through our bond.”
“Could it be a different dragon?” Sam suggested. “Some kind of beast that resembles Storm?”
“No beast looks like that,” Noah said. “The description is too specific. Black scales, blue energy, ice breath. That’s Storm’s exact appearance.”
Diana entered the office, drawn by the commotion. “What’s going on?”
“Settlement reporting a dragon attack,” Sophie explained. “Matches Storm’s description perfectly.”
Diana’s expression sharpened. “That’s either a hell of a coincidence or someone’s trying to get our attention.”
“Either way, we need to investigate,” Noah said. “If something’s impersonating Storm, we need to know what and why. And if it actually is Storm somehow…” He didn’t finish the thought.
Sam pulled up more details from the contract. “Settlement Gamma-7 is about four hours north by transport. Population roughly three thousand. They’ve requested immediate assistance. Willing to pay premium rates for Category Five response.”
“We’ll take it,” Noah decided. “Full team deployment. Diana, Kelvin, Seraleth, and me. Sophie, you coordinate from here with Sam.”
“I’m coming too,” Lila said from the doorway. Noah hadn’t heard her approach, but she’d clearly been listening. “If something’s out there pretending to be your dragon, you’ll need all the combat capability you can get.”
Noah hesitated, then nodded. “Fine. But you follow orders. No improvisation, no going rogue. Clear?”
“Crystal,” Lila replied.
Sam was still staring at his display, his expression troubled. “This doesn’t feel right. The timing, the description, the location. It’s all too convenient.”
“Convenient how?” Sophie asked.
“I don’t know.” Sam shook his head. “Just a feeling. Be careful out there.”
“Always are,” Noah said, though the knot forming in his stomach suggested Sam’s instincts were worth paying attention to.
They had four hours to prepare for whatever was waiting at Settlement Gamma-7.
Four hours to figure out why something was wearing Storm’s face.
And four hours to wonder if they were walking into exactly what Sam suspected—a trap designed specifically for them.